Skyrim Legendary Edition is now available to buy. Akin to a GOTY edition, Legendary Edition contains Skyrim and its DLCs: Dawnguard, Hearthfire, and Dragonborn. The asking price is a little steep, at $60.00, but by buying Legendary, you'll save about $15 over buying Skyrim and its DLCs by themselves. Legendary Edition is also good for Xbox users, who don't want to shell out cash to Xbox Live in order to obtain the DLCs.

Steam Summer Sale will probably include this and will most likely happen in June or July.

It's already available on Steam and I bought the retail version of Skyrim Legendary Edition the same day it became available in Europe.

Also, I can tell you that much that you must re-activate Skyrim Legendary Edition on Steam before you can play all 3 DLC that's included, because I already had Hearthfire and Dragonborn but not Dawnguard.

So what happen when I install it... Well I couldn't figure it out why I didn't have Dawnguard installed, but when I looked on the back of the thin Skyrim manual in the retail box I notice there is a keycode I needed to use to re-activate Skyrim Legendary Edition on Steam. Once I did that Dawnguard was indeed installed after a quick Skyrim update via Steam.

Ah well I have all the DLC for the 360 so already feel like a legend - Fleur is Level 49 and wandering around Raven Rock at the moment looking for somewhere to stay - it feels good to be back in Morrowind.

If you haven't got the DLC then highly recommend this version I'll probably get it for the PC as well.

I'm pretty dissapointed with Skyrim's DLC. They are slightly larger than Fallout 3's (dragonborn was like point lookout, dawnguard was like the others) but there's only two...Beth's RPGs were always great due to the large DLC that when you finally finished playing them, you'd be ready to start a new playthrough again and again. With only two, Skyrim gets boring fast IMO. There's plenty of sidequests, but sidequests bore me, I prefer main storyline (and the guilds in Skyrim are so short).

Still, the DLC are a lot of fun, even though they're not big enough to only be two.

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Wolf go play Morrowind GotY.Really Skyrim's DLCs are not that small. I think Solstheim has actually grown in the 200 years between Morrowind, and Skyrim. Dawnguard while it did not have a lot of new areas to explore it id send you all over the map trying to find this bow. Though if you fast traveled you missed out ton all of the fun of Vampire ambushes, and Vigilents of Stendarr running around chasing one lone Vamp or another.I thought that they were about right considering the amount of money payed for them was not that great, but maybe that's just me.I also found the guild quests (for the three guilds I have played through so far) to be not too short, but I get distracted easily.I guess I may have missed something not playing the Fallout series but Morrowind, and Oblivion both only have two Expansions with the rest of the "DLC" being nothing more then over glorified official mods, cough... Horse armor, and player homes with super short quests attached (Not at all worth the label of DLC)

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Hmm... I've learnt my lesson with the Guilds - my first play through with the Mages Guild left me very unsatisfied as the main quest is very quick - however I hadn't done many of the side quests of the Guild - with the Guilds you can make them feel more lengthy and involved if you don't do the main quest of each Guild but instead do as many of the side ones as possible first.

I've found the DLC pretty satisfying for Skyrim - Dawnguard introduces an interesting companion who comes from the most dysfunctional family on Tamriel - the dialogue is an improvement and some of the places you get to go to are great. I also liked the additional lore that is covered. Dragonborn I haven't seen enough to really judge, however the feel of being back in Morrowind is fantastic, recognizing family names seeing the architecture, standing there looking at a Bull Netch and just marveling as I did in Morrowind is worth the price of admittance. It's like having Morrowind in the Skyrim engine... oh wait... it is